Five Favourites: Umarells

Having just shared their debut EP, One More Day, Manchester-based dream-pop group Umarells create lush, glistening soundscapes, fizzing with a rippling raw emotion. Combining elements of shoegaze, grunge and indie-pop, they offer heartfelt reflections on themes such as grief and failed relationships, each song offering their own unique sparkling musicality.

We think one of the best ways to get to know an artist is by asking what music inspires them. So, following the release of their debut EP, we caught up with Imogen, Josh, Ryan Sarah and Fuchsia to find out about the five albums that inspire them the most. Read about their five favourites, and watch the beautiful video for stirring single ‘June‘, below…

Weyes Blood – Titanic Rising
I first heard Natalie of Weyes Blood’s gorgeous Carpenter-esque voice on Drugdealer’s 2016 album The End Of  Comedy. When Titanic Rising was released in 2019 it resonated as the theme of an era of my life. Blending ‘70s pop vocals with romantic space age synth cynicism I was hooked from my first listen and rushed to see the masterpiece live in Manchester venue Yes’ pink room. ‘Picture Me Better’ – a song written about the loss of a friend – perfectly encapsulates heart wrenching grief and the hope to hear the impossible “call from beyond”. A song that inspired me to pour my own grief into our song ‘One More Day’.

Burial – Untrue
I vividly remember the first time I stumbled upon this album while exploring a friend’s CD collection. It was a revelation – nothing I had ever heard compared to its dark, gritty sound, interwoven with ethereal melodies and harmony. So melancholic. I often listened to it on my bike rides home through the city centre at 5am, after finishing my shift at a nightclub; feeling as though I was the only soul awake in the world. It’s perfect for those late nights when you’re caught between the desire to drift off and the inability to do so. The sampling on this album is incredible; the original sources are so cleverly transformed that I found myself spending hours online trying to uncover their origins. It’s a remarkable masterclass in genre-bending and structure, carving out its own distinct niche within the electronic scene. Its sound remains refreshingly futuristic, even today.

Pixies – Doolittle 
All amazing tracks and completely seminal. I became obsessed with Pixies when I was fifteen, after loading up my mp3 player for a school trip to Sorrento. I’d heard that Nirvana’s loud-quiet-loud structures were ripping off Pixies, so I downloaded some songs from Limewire. Listening to them on a coach driving along the West coast of Italy really cemented the tracks for me and I was kind of blown away by it. The guitar work is just perfect to me – simple driving bass lines, and Joey’s surf inspired riffs and bends are just amazing. The range of sounds in Frank’s voice means the album never gets boring and it contrasts with Kim’s vocals so well. To top it off, ‘Gouge Away’ is just the best final track on an album for me.

The Smashing Pumpkins – Siamese Dream
My favourite album changes constantly, but if I had to choose one right now I’d pick Siamese Dream. My first introduction to Smashing Pumpkins was at about seven or eight years old hearing them on The Simpsons episode ‘Homerpalooza’. A few years later when I hit my full-on emo phase I delved into their back catalogue and Siamese Dream was the album that stuck out to me. I’ve never got sick of listening to it. Billy and James’ guitar playing on this record is just insane to me. The dynamics of the album too are just so great, the fact you’ve got heavy songs like ‘Geek USA’ but the softer songs like ‘Luna’ and ‘Disarm’ but they work perfectly together when listening to the album in full. Billy’s lyrics as well – “Fool enough to almost be it, cool enough to not quite see it. Doomed.” on ‘Mayonaise’, incredible. Whenever I’m writing new music I find this is the album I reference the most.

Big Thief – Two Hands
This is such a beautiful album – the lyrics are so raw and heartfelt – it’s such incredible story telling. The album flows from really soft gentle tracks to heavy gritty ones so effortlessly, and everything about the way it’s recorded sounds so natural. It came out when I first got back into playing music after a really long break and I would just listen to it on repeat. The whole album reminds me of a time when I really started to feel comfortable with myself and listening to it still reminds me of that. Seeing them live at the Apollo last year was an awesome experience!

Huge thanks to Umarells for sharing their five favourites with us! Watch the beautiful new video for stirring single ‘June’ here:

One More Day, the debut album from Umarells, is out now via Fear Of Missing Out Records.

Photo Credit: Kitty Handley

Five Favourites: Zombina and the Skeletones

Having initially blasted onto the Liverpool scene back in 1998, local ‘horror-rockers’ Zombina and the Skeletones have previously wowed audiences with their eccentric energy and intoxicating fusion of sounds supporting the likes of Shonen Knife, The Damned and Misfits. Now, having officially come out of retirement last year, the band have just released their first full-length album in ten years, The Call Of ZombinaInterweaving an eclectic array of sounds, from uptempo garage-punk and girl group pop leanings, to haunting baroque-inspired goth-rock and a swirling punk energy, the album offers a fierce return to form from the Merseryside legends; an exquisite, immersive cacophony that’s not for the faint-hearted. 

We think one of the best ways to get to know a band is by asking what music inspires them. So, following the album’s release, we spoke to Zombina and Dr Horror from ZATS about some of the albums that have influenced them the most. Have a read, and then watch the video for immense new single ‘Don’t Kick My Coffin‘ below, before listening to the full new album in all its glory. 

Zombina’s Picks:

Cocteau Twins – Heaven Or Las Vegas
This is a weird one for me, because I’m not a huge album listener. I’ve always been into bands and artists, and songs in a standalone sense, but poverty and ADHD impatience have always had me flitting around mixtapes and ‘Best Of’ compilations. I’d never have described Cocteau Twins sound as my main kind of thing, but yet I’ve returned to this record again and again and again over the years. It’s been the soundtrack for more scenes in my life’s journey than I can believe: it’s been playing whilst I’m de-cluttering, breastfeeding through the night, working out, reading my bestie’s tarot, shopping, grieving a loss, fucking OR making love (two very different things, and it works for both for me, which is no mean feat!), walking to job interviews, hungover in the tour bus, the list goes on… I genuinely listen to it several times a week. I’m Neurodivergent and I recognise this is one of my top comfort albums. The two times I have managed to write and record music as a solo project, I have only been able to eschew writer’s block by taking a “Cocteau Twins approach” to lyrics, and just letting word sounds tumble out ad-hoc. As someone who has spent a lifetime singing lyrics I rate super highly, written by my best friend, I really think was the only way I could have got past the inner critic to explore the musicality I was trying to access, and I credit this album for that.

Roky Erikson – The Evil One
I don’t remember how soon into our BFF-ship Doc Horror and I started listening to this… Oh shit, wait, yes I do – it must have been almost right away aged fifteen and sixteen, because we recorded a cover of ‘I Walked With A Zombie’ from this album on our home 4-track for the very first Zombina and the Skeletones demo! I’ve still never watched the film about Roky. I think it would upset me too much. I’m a real sucker for the under-dog, people that have struggled and suffered injustices, especially surrounding mental health. I was already floundering my way into the mental healthcare system myself by fifteen. I remember hearing about Roky’s story, and it was never extricable from how I felt listening to his music. I heard the deepest pain and the most jubilant perseverance in his voice; I held on to the thought that he had come out the other side of a dark and brutal life chapter, and still had this creative passion bursting out of him, and sounding so fucking GOOD! He was also someone who had paved the way before us. We were teenage horror movie fanatics, trying to form a band around that shared passion, and then we discover this guy and the genre he named himself – Horror Rock! I was planning to choose my top five tracks from the album, but it’s too hard. Just listen to it. Many times. Let it permeate you like it has me. I implore you!!!

Doc Horror’s Picks:

The B-52’s – The B-52’s
Zombina introduced me to the B-52’s via Cosmic Thing back when we were in school, and that was revelatory enough, but their self-titled debut turned out to really be where it’s at for me. For our generation B-52’s meant ‘Love Shack’ and ‘Rocko’s Modern Life’ and, like, ‘The Flintstones Theme’, not that there’s nothing wrong with that, obviously – but this album is something else entirely. We found it on cassette in a charity shop sometime in the late ’90s and I couldn’t believe how punk-rock this thing is. It’s got this sort of proto-Riot Rrrrl quality to it, but somehow also sounds like flying saucers coming over the horizon. They’ve somehow got way more depth than they get credited for, but are also exactly as silly as they seem. Cindy Wilson’s vocal on ‘Hero Worship’ is possibly the best vocal on anything ever! We caught them live in Manchester years later when they did Funplex and they were still phenomenal. Experiences like that are great training for staving off the I’M GETTING TOO OLD FOR THIS SHIT feeling that can come twenty odd years into being a band. Fun is fun, no matter who you are. Everybody goes to parties!

45 Grave – Sleep In Safety
I remember coming across this LP when Zombina and the Skeletones was very new, and seeing that amazing band photo on the back cover and immediately finding new role models in 45 Grave before I even heard their music. I purchased it at the next opportunity and found myself utterly baffled by the music on first listen. From what I’ve heard, it seems like I’m not alone in that. A lot of people find Sleep In Safety quite difficult to get into, but you have to stick with it!  Once you get past the tonal whiplash of the whole “oh it’s a sort of dark prog record… no wait it’s hardcore punk… oh what’s this surf instrumental doing here?” experience, it’s actually incredibly rewarding – and very much ended up as a template for what we do, in a lot of ways. It was like suddenly being given a license to disregard the constraints of genre. And then you get to the chorus in ‘Partytime’ and realise that this was the song that seemed to be coming out of that skeleton’s mouth in that one scene in The Return Of The Living Dead – the movie that you and Zombina watched alongside The Rocky Horror Picture Show a few months back and that’s what inspired you to start a spooky band in the first place -, and it’s all come full circle… But you never would have guessed that it was the same band because the chorus from ‘Partytime’ sounds like some AC/DC pastiche. Again… baffling. A couple of years later, one of our first European shows was opening for Dinah Cancer’s post-45 Grave band Penis Flytrap. She turned out to be really nice. Not nearly as scary as you’d think. Whenever I put on Sleep In Safety, I find myself transported to ZATS year one and I’m filled with the excitement of future possibilities. It’s still a weird listen even now. Our track ‘Dead Birds’ on The Call Of Zombina is a bit of a love letter to this sound.

Girls At Our Best – Pleasure
I don’t really ever discover new current music. Instead, my version of that seems to be stumbling across things from the eighties that are at least new to me – often from bands like Girls At Our Best, who split up around the time I was born. I have no clue how Pleasure even ended up on my radar. It seemed to just appear in my life a couple of years ago without me really noticing and I just kept finding the various tracks stuck in my head and before long I was just binging it daily and playing it to people, like “check this out…”. I’m not sure if I’ve successfully converted any fans yet. I ended up listening to it constantly while writing The Call Of Zombina but if you were to play to our record side by side with this one you probably wouldn’t make any connection between the two. Pleasure is all major key sunshine and The Call Of Zombina is more like a night in Dracula’s castle… But it was very subtly informed by Pleasure on some subliminal level. It’s just great. Every song has about 20 legitimate hooks apiece, loads of inventiveness, earworms and strange instrumental choices. You have to wonder who they were and what happened to them. They made this one excellent album then fucked off.

Huge thanks to Zombina and Doc Horror for sharing their Five Favourites with us! Watch the new video for ‘Don’t Kick My Coffin’ below:

The Call Of Zombina, the brand new album from Zombina and the Skeletones, is out now via 9×9 Records. Buy it now.

EP: Piney Gir – Cosmic Upside Down

With some twenty years’ experience in music, Piney Gir has earned a reputation as something of a go-to in the world of indie – there’s been collaborations and support slots with pretty much everyone, from big names like Ride, Gaz Coomes and Noel Gallagher to less-heralded indie acts such as The Hidden Cameras and Sweet Baboo. Wikipedia also notes that Piney – who was born in Kansas, but is now based in London – is also a journalist, cookbook author, and puppeteer. If that’s not enough to be going on with, Piney’s interest in witchcraft has led her to recently produce a trilogy of EPs. Starting with 2021’s mini space odyssey Astral Spectra and continued with the indie pop-magick exploration of Alchemy Hand in 2022, now latest release Cosmic Upside Down furthers her previous releases’ combination of twanging guitar stylings, deceptively simple lilts and Gir’s trademark honeyed vocals.

Opener ‘Show Me The Lightning’ has that guitar ringing right up front, while its lyrics speak of the magical excitement of heavy weather. As the track swells into its chorus, synths are introduced, which then swirl throughout, taking us further into the ethereal storm. Following this, the EP’s title track is a tale of tarot, with its title (and lyrics) discussing the ‘uncertainty’ of the cards’ meanings – especially when they are drawn inverted. The Cups “lead the way” but The Moon, despite its light, is still the most ambiguous. The Ace of Wands comes “out of the blue”, just like the flurry of sax that precedes it; threatening to take the track in another direction, before arpeggiated keyboard brings us back to the shuffle-and-draw process.

Switching themes, the lyrics of ‘What Have We Done for Nature?’ discuss climate change, with its keyboard-led backing evoking Jane Weaver, and elements of its percussion drawing from both White Album Beatles and ‘60s girl group rhythms.  This is no polemic (which doesn’t seem Piney’s style), more a holistic consideration of what nature gives us, compared to what we give back. Not much seems to be the conclusion.  

Closer ‘Witches & Covens’ is, musically, the gentlest track on the EP, but returns to the themes of uncertainty found in Cosmic Upside Down. Devotion here, much like for the subjects in its title, is a given, even when the subject of the song “twists” the narrator’s “melon”. Happy Mondays are just one of a few nods to other artists here, with a lift from Elvis’ ‘Blue Suede Shoes’ also featuring prominently. With the further reference to “stars align[ing] in East LA”, the whole feels like the tale of a well-versed musician grappling with the other-worldly, and the all-too-worldy – perhaps not coincidental, given Piney’s bio to date.

With an impressive degree of sonic density, as the musical experience of Piney and her backing band would suggest, these four intriguing songs draw the listener in to return and immerse themselves fully in the EP’s swirling majestic allure. It’s rather like the repetition of a witchy incantation, or laying out a spread of cards, you might say. A fascinating addition to an already decades-long career, Cosmic Upside Down suggests that Piney Gir will have us under her spell for some time to come.

Cosmic Upside Down, the new EP from Piney Gir, is out now via No Distance Records. The EP was produced and mixed by Tomas Greenhalf at Direktorenhaus and mastered by Kevin Tuffy at Manmade Mastering.

John McGovern
@etinsuburbiaego

Introducing Interview: Breymer

Set to release their new album, When I Get Through, later this month, Minnesota born artist Sarah Walk – aka Breymer – creates sweeping indie-pop anthems, oozing a raw emotion and stirring heartfelt splendour. Exploring their relationship with gender and identity, the album marks the first since they recently changed their artist name – from Sarah Walk to the more androgynous Breymer – to reflect how they feel about themselves after their recent top surgery. Interweaving lush layered vocals and a shimmering textured musicality as it reflects on a personal journey of self-discovery with a stark honesty, it’s a truly exquisite collection.

We caught up with Breymer to find out more about the album, their live shows and being a queer artist in the industry. Have a read and watch the beautiful live video for latest single, ‘The Feeling (When I See You)‘, at the bottom of the article.

Hi Breymer! Welcome to Get In Her Ears! How are you doing today?
Hi there! I’m doing well thanks. Busy as ever preparing for these album release shows!

Are you able to tell us a bit about what initially inspired you to start creating music?
It was never really a decision, I just always found myself gravitating towards the piano writing my own songs. Even as a young kid, around four or five years old, I would refuse to practise piano learning other songs and would instead just sit there and put on performances of my own ideas. I always had this desire to create and share.

I love the raw stirring emotion and glistening musicality of your songs, but who would you consider to be your main musical influences?
I grew up listening to a lot of different music. I like to think of them as inspirations and not influences so much, or at least not intentionally. When I was young I loved pop and rock music — Hanson was my first album (don’t hate on it, that debut LP rules) Third Eye Blind, the Goo Goo dolls… I loved that kind of classic pop melodic sensibility. Then as I got a little older I started to love R&B and hip hop, like Usher and Jay Z, I think it was the rhythm that really was mesmerising to me, and then that turned into folk music like Paul Simon and Joni Mitchell as I got a little older. The last in that core discovery period of my youth was probably indie bands, like Radiohead, Fiona Apple and Phoenix. I like to think there are specific elements of each of those genres that still inspire my music today.

You recently announced the release of your upcoming album When I Get Through, which is super exciting! It’s been described as a collection of songs exploring your relationship with gender and identity – are you able to tell us a bit more about this and how this theme has inspired your writing?
The album really follows my entire journey of getting (and decided to) get top surgery. The beginning of the album opens with a song which documents the first time I ever told anyone (outside of my partner) that I was considering the surgery, but I still had so much internal shame and repression. Throughout the course of the album, I process these emotions and find my way to the final track ‘Anesthesia’ which leads me into the operating room. It’s a deeply personal album, and I wanted the focus to be on the process and the journey instead of the result.

And how would you say the process of recording the album has differed from your previous releases?
Each time I make an album it has a totally different feel to it. A lot of that is based on the way you record, or the arrangement of the songs, but I think the biggest element involves the people you bring in to make the album with you. This album was primarily made by myself and Tyler Chester, who produced it. We had Abe Rounds, my dear friend, play drums as well, but for the most part it was just me and Tyler putting it together. That was a different approach for me because the previous two albums were more of a band dynamic. I think it made for a really personal and vulnerable environment where I felt like I could try and things and make mistakes. Tyler was wonderful in cultivating a really thoughtful and inclusive environment where getting the song right was the priority. There was no ego involved.

Following the album’s release, you’re heading over the UK in November to play a couple of shows. What can fans expect from a Breymer performance?
Well for one, I’m very much looking forward to playing with a full band again. I always have so much more fun on stage with other people, and I’m really thrilled to be bringing back some of my favourite musicians with me. I think the Breymer project has really allowed me to think intentionally about what this new name should represent. And for me, particularly alongside the album content, I want joy and reclamation to be at the forefront. While this album (and performing it) will undoubtedly bring a lot of vulnerability and fragility, I want the end result and the embodiment of who I am now as an artist to be on the other side of this; acceptance, freedom and joy.

And has there been a specific show you’ve played over the years that stands out as a particular highlight?
The best shows for me aren’t necessarily the biggest ones, but the ones where I have the most fun on stage with the people I’m playing with. One show that comes to mind was about 2 years ago at a really small club in London. I was co headlining with a really good friend of mine, and one of my dear friends (and former college bandmate) Lenny Brown who was playing bass with me. He’s just the best and makes any gig 10x better. The other songwriter who I was performing with came on stage to sing a song with me, and for some reason (it was the end of a very long and exhausting tour, so we were sort of losing it at this point) I could NOT stop laughing. I don’t know what got into me, but I just couldn’t even get through the song. Hopefully the audience members didn’t think I wasn’t incredibly unprofessional, but honestly it’s nights like that, particularly when you’re so exhausted, that just lift the mood and make you remember how fun performing with your friends can (and should) be. I think I value that more and more as I get older. It should be fun.

And when you’re out on tour, or playing gigs, are there any particular essentials that you like to have with you to keep you going?
I’ve definitely got my staples that I’ve learned help me a lot. One would be all of my sleep items. I used to be such an easy sleeper, but those days are gone (especially on the road). So now, I need an eye mask, a small fan that I always travel with, and a noise machine I play from my phone. I feel so lame but sleep is SO important and I’ll do whatever it takes. I also love to travel with my aeropress coffee maker. It’s easy to travel with and I’ve found that making your own coffee on the road saves you SO MUCH money. It’s also (most importantly) such a nice way to instil some sense of routine and control into an otherwise extremely unpredictable and chaotic schedule.

As we’re an organisation with a focus on supporting new and marginalised artists, I just wondered how you feel the industry is for them at the moment? And do you feel much has changed over the years in its treatment of female and queer artists?
I saw this article today that said in an interview with 1200 musicians, 67% of female identifying respondents said they had been a victim of sexual harassment, and over 70% discriminated against. Now that may not all be FROM the music industry, but I wouldn’t be surprised. I think there has been a huge shift recently, particularly in mainstream pop, where queer female artists are becoming much more outspoken and on the front lines, and that visibility is amazing. But I also think with that visibility comes more transparency about these other issues, like  discrimination, sexual harassment and severe depression. It’s such a tough industry, even without these things, so when you pile that on top of it, it can feel unbearable.

And are there any other new bands or artists that you’d recommend we check out at the moment?
I played a few shows last week on the east coast and met another artist who was an opening act in Asheville, NC. His name was Michael Flynn and his artist project is called Slow Runner. It was funny because he saw my setup on stage and said he had the exact same setup – same keyboard, and a small drum machine to accompany his playing. We also had weirdly VERY similar outfits on. There was just had this weird ‘cut from the same cloth’ thing going right away. Anyway, I absolutely loved his performance, and I think one of his songs called ‘Vape King’ was probably one of the best written songs I’ve heard in the past few years (it’s not out anywhere, but hopefully he records it soon….). Anyway, he was awesome and we’ve kept in touch and are going to write together via Zoom soon. Moments like that are such gems on the road.

Is there anything else you’d like to add about upcoming plans or particular thoughts you’d like to mention?
I have two more US album release shows ahead of the UK dates that I’m super excited about and working really hard on. We will be playing the whole album top to bottom, raising money for local gender affirmation clinics through raffles from local business donations, and displaying a few LGBTQ+ visual artists work in accompanying gallery spaces at the venues.

Huge thanks to Breymer for answering our questions!


When I Get Through, the upcoming new album from Breymer, is out next Friday 18th October via One Little Independent Records – pre-order here. Catch them live in the UK next month – playing Brighton on 25th November and London on 26th November. More info here.

12th October – US, LA – Wonzimer Gallery
26th October – US, MN – Berlin
25th November – UK, Brighton – The Folkore Rooms
26th November – UK, London – Paper Dress Vintage

Photo Credit: Simone Thompson